THE NEW YORKER ing, and very vivid-about all the operations, whether serious or mere- ly popular, from appendectomy to surgery on the "forbidden temples" of the brain, lungs, and heart. No technical terms and no silly oversim- plification, either. Clear diagrams by Bhola D. Panth. HOME TOWN, by Sherwood Anderson. Nostalgic text-and-picture book that catches the tone of American small- town life from Vermont to Alabama. The Farm Security Administration contrihutes 111 first-rate documen- tary photographs by Marion Post, Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, and others. Part of the Face of America Series. HARBOR OF THE SUN, by Max Miller. Rather easygoing history of San Di- ego, oldest port on our West Coast, and its long muster of Spaniards, In- dians, pirates, whalers, -Mormons, soldiers, and the rest, plus an account of modern tuna fishing and the naval and air hase. In the Seaport Series. Illustrated. ROGER FRY, by Virginia Woolf. This biography of the English art critic is a record of his versatile career, much of it from his own writings, and a revaluation of his work as a painter; it is also a tranquil, distinguished study of artistic sensibility, its growth and mutations, its products and effects. A skillful job in which Mrs. Woolf makes every fact count. Illustrated. EVE WITNESS, by members of the Overseas Press Club of America, edited by Robert Spiers Benjamin. Twenty-three foreign correspond- ents' tales about happenings in Nic- aragua, France, China, British So- maliland, and so on, by Linton Wells, Emil Lengyel, Eugene Lyons, and others. A few thrillers,' but the book is not up to this group's previous vol- ume, "The Inside Story." SONS OF SIN BAD, by Alan Villiers. V oy- ages in the Arabian Sea (including a trip in a dhow) and down the east coast of Africa to Zanzibar, pearl fish- ing in the Persian Gulf, etc. A-I trav- el adventure, done in the author's best seagoing style. The descriptions of traditional Arab vessels will be of spe- cial interest to yachtsmen. Charts and photographs by Mr. Villiers. AUTHOR IN TRANSIT, by Lance- lot Hogben. The Germans called un- announced at Oslo one morning last April, and the British author of "Mathematics for the Million" had just time enough to depart for Eng- land by way of Sweden, Rus- sia, Japan, Hawaii, and the United 87 . "This is the best book Ernest Hemingway has written, the fullest, the deepest, the truest. It will, I think, be one of the major novels in American literature" -J. Donald Adams in the New York Times. "' by DAWN POWELL,} I/ /Jt "FINEST ..'...1-; ..: -.. . - i : ,.....--':.:- ....>,; :: --....... ' "'''''' , , ,,; {'h ,:,,,, WORK TO For Whom the Bell Tolls "A great Hemingway love story; a tense story of adventure in war; a grave and sornbre tragedy of Spanish peasa ts fighting for their lives. . .The bell in this book tolls for all mankind."-Time Mag- azine. $2.75 Charles. Scribner's Sons, New York THE New NATIONAL BEST SELLER A wise and witty novel of high-pressure business men, their wives-and their women. "Pungent satire and sometimes more than that'."-Lewis Gannett, New YOl.k Herald Tribune. $2.50 at aI' bookstores ÞF Published this week! THE VOYAGE By Charles Morgan $2.50 ÞF Come and get it-at rentano's C]JOOKSELLERB to the UfJI{LD . BRyant 9-5700- 586 Fifth Avenue, [I lfés/ 47th] - Mw1ôrl{ </ GAILY WRlrTE N-.. oc o _ lr':- S PICIL y SET ORìH'J -1t.1.. /yORTIMER.. ..T." ADLER... ....... , ..,- ENGLAND ( < A' vY " E D ELt=ANot::( ) IW r/I p... "t:A I.." Sf' 1'AGE$OF · · r $2 50 - c,. :::: ' '" '\, r;.C$'-'-- . $3.75 NEW ENGLAND: INDIAN SUMMER Few books in our time have received such praise! . "A better book than The Flower.. ing of New England, quite as in- teresting, but more significant."- HENRY SEIDEL CANBY . "A joy and a possession in which we as a nation may take pride."- CLIFTON F ADIMAN . "Here is biography at its most telling-makes all recent books pallid by comparison." -JOHN CHAMBERLAIN (HARPER'S) . "The literary event of 1940."- WILLIAM McFEE (N. Y. SUN) E. P. DUTTON & CO. 300 4th Ave... N. Y. C.